keeps scolding and
   screaming
   she’s screaming at her child
   now she’s clearing her
   throat
   I lean forward
   to get a book of matches to
   light my
   cigarette
   then she screams again
   she’s beating her child
   the child screams
   then it’s quiet
   all I can hear are the
   crickets
   droning
   planet earth: where
   Christ came
   and
   never experienced
   sex with a
   woman or a
   man.
   the angel who pushed his wheelchair
   long ago he edited a little magazine
   it was up in San Francisco
   during the beat era
   during the reading-poetry-with-jazz experiments
   and I remember him because he never returned my manuscripts
   even though I wrote him many letters,
   humble letters, sane letters, and, at last, violent letters;
   I’m told he jumped off a roof
   because a woman wouldn’t love him.
   no matter. when I saw him again
   he was in a wheelchair and carried a wine bottle to piss in;
   he wrote very delicate poetry
   that I, naturally, couldn’t understand;
   he autographed his book for me
   (which he said I wouldn’t like)
   and once at a party I threatened to punch him and
   I was drunk and he wept and
   I took pity and instead hit the next poet who walked by
   on the head with his piss bottle; so,
   we had an understanding after all.
   he had this very thin and intense woman
   pushing him about, she was his arms and legs and
   maybe for a while
   his heart.
   it was almost commonplace
   at poetry readings where he was scheduled to read
   to see her swiftly rolling him in,
   sometimes stopping by me, saying,
   “I don’t see how we are going to get him up on the stage!”
   sometimes she did. often she did.
   then she began writing poetry, I didn’t see much of it,
   but, somehow, I was glad for her.
   then she injured her neck while doing her yoga
   and she went on disability, and again I was glad for her,
   all the poets wanted to get disability insurance
   it was better than immortality.
   I met her in the market one day
   in the bread section, and she held my hands and
   trembled all over
   and I wondered if they ever had sex
   those two. well, they had the muse anyhow
   and she told me she was writing poetry and articles
   but really more poetry, she was really writing a lot,
   and that’s the last I saw of her
   until one night somebody told me she’d o.d.’d
   and I said, no, not her
   and they said, yes, her.
   it was a day or so later
   sometime in the afternoon
   I had to go to the Los Feliz post office
   to mail some dirty stories to a sex mag.
   coming back
   outside a church
   I saw these smiling creatures
   so many of them smiling
   the men with beards and long hair and wearing
   bluejeans
   and most of the women blonde
   with sunken cheeks and tiny grins,
   and I thought, ah, a wedding,
   a nice old-fashioned wedding,
   and then I saw him on the sidewalk
   in his wheelchair
   tragic yet somehow calm
   looking greyer, a profile like a tamed hawk,
   and I knew it was her funeral,
   she had really o.d.’d
   and he did look tragic out there.
   I do have feelings, you know.
   maybe tonight I’ll try to read his book.
   the circus of death
   it’s there
   from the beginning, to the middle, to the
   end,
   there from light to darkness,
   there through the wasted
   days and nights, through
   the wasted years,
   the continuance
   of moving toward death.
   sitting with death in your lap,
   washing death out of your ears
   and from between your toes,
   talking to death, living with death while
   living through the stained walls and the flat
   tires
   and the changing of the guard.
   living with death in your stockings.
   opening the morning blinds to death,
   the circus of death,
   the dancing girls of death,
   the yellow teeth of death,
   the cobra of death,
   the deserts of death.
   death like a tennis ball in the mouth of
   a dog.
   death while eating a candlelight dinner.
   the roses of death.
   death like a moth.
   death like an empty shoe.
   death the dentist.
   through darkness and light and
   laughter,
   through the painting of a
   masterpiece,
   through the applause for the bowing
   actors,
   while taking
   a walk through Paris,
   by the broken-winged
   bluebird,
   while
   glory
   runs through your fingers as
   you
   pick up an orange.
   through the bottom of the sky
   divided into sections like a
   watermelon
   it
   bellows
   silently,
   consumes names and nations,
   squirrels, fleas, hogs,
   dandelions,
   grandmothers, babies,
   statues,
   philosophies,
   groundhogs,
   the bullfighter, the bull and
   all those killers in the
   stadium.
   it’s Plato and the murderer of a
   child.
   the eyes in your head.
   your fingernails.
   it’s amazing, amazing, amazing.
   we’re clearly at the edge.
   it’s thunder in a snail’s shell.
   it’s the red mark on the black widow.
   it’s the mirror without a reflection.
   it’s the singular viewpoint.
   it’s in the fog over Corpus Christi.
   it’s in the eye of the hen.
   it’s on the back of the turtle.
   it’s moving at the sun
   as you put your shoes on for the last
   time
   without
   knowing
   it.
   the man?
   my daughter said this when she was 5:
   HERE COMES THE MAN!
   what? I said. what?
   I looked all around.
   HERE COMES THE MAN!
   O, HERE COMES THE MAN!
   I went to the window and
   looked out. I checked the latch
   on the door.
   she came out of the kitchen
   with a spoon and a piepan:
   clang, clang, clang!
   HERE COMES THE MAN!
   HERE COMES THE MAN!
   O, LOOK, SEE THE MAN!
   SEE THE MAN NOW!
   HERE COMES THE MAN!
   she means something else,
   I thought, and I clapped my hands in
   rhythm and we both
   marched around and
   sang and
					     					 			 />   laughed. me
   loudest.
   Christmas poem to a man in jail
   hello Bill Abbott:
   I appreciate your passing around my books in
   jail there, my poems and stories.
   if I can lighten the load for some of those guys with
   my books, fine.
   but literature, you know, is difficult for the
   average man to assimilate (and for the unaverage man too);
   I don’t like most poetry, for example,
   so I write mine the way I like to read it.
   poetry does seem to be getting better, more
   human,
   the clearing up of the language has something to
   do with it. (w.c. williams came along and asked
   everybody to clear up the language)
   then
   I came along.
   but writing’s one thing, life’s
   another, we
   seem to have improved the writing a bit
   but life (ours and theirs)
   doesn’t seem to be improving very
   much.
   maybe if we write well enough
   and live a little better
   life will improve a bit
   just out of shame.
   maybe the artists haven’t been powerful
   enough,
   maybe the politicians, the generals, the judges, the
   priests, the police, the pimps, the businessmen have been too
   strong? I don’t
   like that thought
   but when I look at our pale and precious artists,
   past and present, it does seem
   possible.
   (people don’t like it when I talk this way.
   Chinaski, get off it, they say,
   you’re not that great.
   but
   hell, I’m not talking about being
   great.)
   what I’m saying is
   that art hasn’t improved life like it
   should, maybe because it has been too
   private? and despite the fact that the old poets
   and the new poets and myself
   all seem to have had the same or similar troubles
   with:
   women
   government
   God
   love
   hate
   penury
   slavery
   insomnia
   transportation
   weather
   wives, and so
   forth.
   you write me now
   that the man in the cell next to yours
   didn’t like my punctuation
   the placement of my commas (especially)
   and also the way I digress
   in order to say something precisely.
   ah, he doesn’t realize the intent
   which is
   to loosen up, humanize, relax,
   and still make as real as possible
   the word on the page. the word should be like
   butter or avocados or
   steak or hot biscuits, or onion rings or
   whatever is really
   needed. it should be almost
   as if you could pick up the words and
   eat them.
   (there is some wise-ass somewhere
   out there
   who will say
   if he ever reads this:
   “Chinaski, if I want dinner I’ll go out and
   order it!”)
   however
   an artist can wander and still maintain
   essential form. Dostoevsky did it. he
   usually told 3 or 4 stories on the side
   while telling the one in the
   center (in his novels, that is).
   Bach taught us how to lay one melody down on
   top of another and another melody on top of
   that and
   Mahler wandered more than anybody I know
   and I find great meaning
   in his so-called formlessness.
   don’t let the form-and-rule boys
   like that guy in the cell next to you
   put one over on you. just
   hand him a copy of Time or Newsweek
   and he’ll be
   happy.
   but I’m not defending my work (to you or him)
   I’m defending my right to do it in the way
   that makes me feel best.
   I always figure if a writer is bored with his work
   the reader is going to be
   bored too.
   and I don’t believe in
   perfection, I believe in keeping the
   bowels loose
   so I’ve got to agree with my critics
   when they say I write a lot of shit.
   you’re doing 19 and 1/2 years
   I’ve been writing about 40.
   we all go on with our things.
   we all go on with our lives.
   we all write badly at times
   or live badly at times.
   we all have bad days
   and nights.
   I ought to send that guy in the cell next to yours
   The Collected Works of Robert Browning for Christmas,
   that’d give him the form he’s looking for
   but I need the money for the track,
   Santa Anita is opening on the
   26th, so give him a copy of Newsweek
   (the dead have no future, no past, no present,
   they just worry about commas)
   and have I placed the commas here
   properly,
   Abbott?
   snake eyes?
   it was not a good day.
   there was a jagged wretchedness inhabiting
   my part of the world
   and now I sit at this machine
   tonight
   hoping for some luck and some
   light
   but they refuse to
   fire, things refuse to
   fire.
   Wagner on the radio is
   grand
   but whatever was born in me
   today
   has been stamped
   out, tossed
   away.
   I don’t ask for your
   sympathy
   during this
   Twilight of the Gods,
   I am just speaking to myself
   and this is the medium through
   which I speak.
   still, if somebody reads
   this
   and your day and your
   night
   were
   akin to mine,
   then somehow we’ve touched,
   strange brother or
   sister,
   and we both understand that death is
   not the
   tragedy.
   you are alone and I am
   alone
   and it’s best that we aren’t
   together
   comparing our pitiful
   sorrows.
   only let me sit before this
   tired machine,
   strange friend,
   and write this
   final
   dull
   line:
   thank you for reading
   this far.
   my friends down at the corner:
   dirty little bugger
   about 10 years old
   he sits on a box near the newsboy
   he has nothing to do
   but sit on that box near the newsboy
   and watch
   and he watches me
   as I buy a newspaper
   and then he runs in after me
   as I go into the liquor store
   and he stands there watching as I pay for a
   6-pack,
   dirty little bugger.
   I interest him; he sickens me.
   we are natural enemies.
   I leave him in there.
   fuck that newsboy too,
   at 55 he looks like a 
					     					 			 cantaloupe.
   why is it such a problem to buy
   a newspaper and a few
   beers?
   smiling, shining, singing
   my daughter looked like a young Katharine Hepburn
   at the grammar school Christmas presentation.
   she stood there with them
   smiling, shining, singing
   in the long dress I had bought for her.
   she looks like Katharine Hepburn, I told her mother
   who sat on my left.
   she looks like Katharine Hepburn, I told my girlfriend
   who sat on my right.
   my daughter’s grandmother was another seat away;
   I didn’t tell her anything.
   I never did like Katharine Hepburn’s acting,
   but I liked the way she looked,
   class, you know,
   somebody you could talk to in bed for
   an hour or two before going to
   sleep.
   I can see that my daughter is going to be a
   beautiful woman.
   someday when I am old
   she’ll probably bring the bedpan with a
   kindly smile.
   and she’ll probably marry a truckdriver with a
   heavy tread
   who bowls every Thursday night
   with the boys.
   well, all that doesn’t matter.
   what matters is now.
   her grandmother is a hawk of a woman.
   her mother is a psychotic liberal and lover of life.
   her father is an asshole.
   my daughter looked like a young Katharine Hepburn.
   after the Christmas presentation
   we went to McDonald’s and ate, and fed the sparrows.
   Christmas was a week away.
   we were less concerned about that than nine-tenths of the town.
   that’s class, we both have class.
   to ignore Christmas takes a special wisdom
   but Happy New Year to
   you all.
   Bruckner
   listening to Bruckner now.
   I relate very much to him.
   he just misses
   by so little.
   I ache for his dead
   guts.
   if we all could only move it
   up one notch
   when necessary.
   but we can’t.
   I remember my fight in the